The Gospel Provides the Missing Link to Well-Being

The search for meaning and purpose is not new. It has dogged mankind from the beginning of time. There is a natural, inescapable desire to live in peace and security, love and happiness. These are not merely random values or desires of a certain people or time period, but something that transcends cultures because it is how God made us.

The Missing Link to Well-Being

All human behavior, when analyzed deeply enough, will be found to be motivated by the desire for life and flourishing, individually and corporately…. Every person has a powerful, relentless drive to experience shalom through right relationships with God, with our families, with our communities, and with the physical creation. This is because shalom was God’s original design in creation. And as we will see, restoration of shalom is his design in redemption.

The missing link to well-being is this “relentless drive to experience shalom” through right relationships with God, our families, our communities, and creation.

The Gospel of Sin-Management Leaves Out a Full Picture of Flourishing

The idea of having faith in Jesus has come to be totally isolated from being his apprentice and learning how to do what he said.

This describes many evangelical Christians in the church today. Their salvation is simply a bus ticket to heaven and is in no way connected to their everyday lives.

This disconnect is what Willard memorably calls a “gospel of sin management,” a powerless message that enables us to be confident of post-mortem salvation but leaves us largely clueless as to how to handle the events of life.

God has given us a new life in Christ, not a well-being program. As Willard and co-author Gary Black write in The Divine Conspiracy Continued,

A good life requires much more than favorable economic or political conditions, because such a life is most certainly not accomplished as a result of human ingenuity.

It is only because of the inside-out transformation produced by the gospel in our personal lives that this “good life” is possible. But, if the narrative shaping your life does not produce practices consistent with that narrative, what use is the narrative?

Reweaving Shalom

Our life in Christ should produce a life in the world that is very different, one that works at reweaving shalom in our work, our communities, our families and our churches – life that begins to realize the idea of biblical flourishing within the spheres of influence God have given each of us.

The secret to well-being has been revealed to us in God’s word. We need to reveal it to the rest of the world in both our words and our actions.